BEIJING (AP) — U.S. National Security Adviser Tom Donilon has pushed
for stronger military relations with China as part of preparations for a
summit next month between President Barack Obama and China's Xi
Jinping.
However, difficulties establishing trust between the sides were
underscored by new revelations Tuesday that China used cyberattacks to
access data from nearly 40 Pentagon weapons programs and almost 30 other
defense technologies, ranging from missile defense systems to the F-35
joint strike fighter.
The disclosure was included in a Defense Science Board report
released earlier this year, but is only now being discussed publicly. It
came shortly after Donilon wrapped up discussions with Chinese
officials in Beijing and as Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel was heading to
Southeast Asia for multinational talks on issues including the
escalating cyberthreat.
While officials have been warning for years about China's cyber
espionage efforts aimed at U.S. military and high-tech programs, the
breadth of the list underscored how routine the attacks have become.
Donilon did not directly mention hacking in his opening comments at a
meeting Tuesday morning with Gen. Fan Changlong, a vice chairman of the
commission overseeing China's armed forces.
Instead, he emphasized that nontraditional military activities such
as peacekeeping, disaster relief and anti-piracy operations offer
opportunities to boost cooperation and "contribute to greater mutual
confidence and understanding."
A "healthy, stable, and reliable military-to-military relationship"
is an essential part of overall China-U.S. ties, Donilon said at the
start of the meeting at China's hulking Defense Ministry building in
central Beijing.
Donilon met with a range of Chinese officials over two days to hammer
out plans for the June 7-8 summit, the first face-to-face meeting
between the presidents since Obama's re-election and Xi's promotion to
Communist Party chief last November.
Their informal summit at the private Sunnylands estate of the late
publishing tycoon Walter Annenberg in southern California will come
months before the two leaders had been originally scheduled to meet,
underscoring concerns that the U.S-China relationship was drifting.
Xi told Donilon on Monday that relations were at a critical juncture,
and that the sides must now "build on past successes and open up new
dimensions for the future."
Building trust between their militaries is one of the main challenges
the sides face in seeking to stop a drift in relations, troubled by
issues from trade disputes to allegations of Chinese cyberspying.
A White House statement issued after Tuesday's meeting emphasized the
need to cooperate further on North Korea, cyber-security, climate
change and stability in Asia. It called the upcoming summit a "unique
and important opportunity" to discuss U.S.-China relations and regional
and global challenges facing both countries.
Although Washington and Beijing have talked about boosting military
cooperation for more than a decade, distrust runs high and disagreements
over Taiwan, North Korea and China's assertive claims to disputed
territories in the East and South China seas remain potential
flashpoints.
The U.S. has repeatedly questioned the purpose of China's heavy
military buildup over the past two decades, while Beijing is deeply
suspicious of Washington's new focus on military alliances in Asia and
plans to redeploy more weaponry and troops to the Asia-Pacific region.
Steps to increase benign interactions between their militaries have
been modest so far, including joint anti-piracy drills in the Gulf of
Aden and a classroom natural disaster response simulation. The U.S. has
also invited China to take part in large U.S.-led multinational naval
exercises, though China has not said if it would participate.
Apart from purely military issues, distrust has deepened as the U.S.
feels its world leadership challenged and China, its power growing,
demands greater deference to its interests and a larger say over global
rule-setting. Chinese officials and state media regularly say Washington
is thwarting China's rise by hemming Beijing in through its Asian
alliances and discouraging Chinese investment in the U.S. on grounds of
national security.
U.S. officials have been far more open about discussing the China
cyberattacks over the past year or two, beginning with a November 2011
report by U.S. intelligence agencies that accused China of
systematically stealing American high-tech data for its own national
economic gain. The Pentagon, meanwhile, in its latest report on China's
military power, asserted publicly for the first time that Beijing's
military was likely behind computer-based attacks targeting federal
agencies.
"In 2012, numerous computer systems around the world, including those
owned by the U.S. government, continued to be targeted for intrusions,
some of which appear to be attributable directly to the Chinese
government and military," said the report, which was released earlier
this month.
http://cnsnews.com/news/article/hacking-overshadows-obamas-push-closer-us-china-ties
Obama is no kings don’t like to be constrained. But all government should be.Obama is Pathological Liar, He is an Ideological Liar because the true objectives of his fundamental transformation of the United States are incompatible with American democracy and tradition Obama devotion to the Machiavellian dictum of "the ends justify the means" and lying as an instrument of government policy have been the tools of political extremists throughout history.
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